Tampa Bay Rays

ROGER MOONEY TORONTO The Rays will take advantage of Thursday’s off day and juggle the rotation for this weekend’s series with the Yankees. Alex Cobb will be moved up and start Sunday’s game. Rookie Jake Odorizzi, origi...
ROGER MOONEY TORONTO The Rays will take advantage of Thursday’s off day and juggle the rotation for this weekend’s series with the Yankees. Alex Cobb will be moved up and start Sunday’s game. Rookie Jake Odorizzi, originally slated to pitch Sunday, will be pushed back to Monday and face…
about 1 hour ago
TORONTO — Jose Bautista homered twice and drove in the winning run with a 10th-inning single, leading the Toronto Blue Jays to a 4-3 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays on Wednesday.Bautista went 4 for 4 with a walk and four RBIs. Three othe...
TORONTO — Jose Bautista homered twice and drove in the winning run with a 10th-inning single, leading the Toronto Blue Jays to a 4-3 victory over the Tampa Bay Rays on Wednesday.Bautista went 4 for 4 with a walk and four RBIs. Three other players had one hit, but that was it for Toronto's offense. Read more Jose Bautista news
about 2 hours ago
TORONTO — Jose Bautista took the game into his own hands with four runs batted in on Wednesday as the Toronto Blue Jays defeated the Tampa Bay Rays 4-3 in 10 innings. View full post on Yahoo! Sports – MLB – Tampa Bay Ra...
TORONTO — Jose Bautista took the game into his own hands with four runs batted in on Wednesday as the Toronto Blue Jays defeated the Tampa Bay Rays 4-3 in 10 innings. View full post on Yahoo! Sports – MLB – Tampa Bay Rays News
about 5 hours ago
Today was also Jose Molina's return from a hamstring injury. He would play inspired baseball, but that's not the focus in this loss. Jeremy Hellickson was struggling with command - and specifically the curve - right out the gate. It wa...
Today was also Jose Molina's return from a hamstring injury. He would play inspired baseball, but that's not the focus in this loss. Jeremy Hellickson was struggling with command - and specifically the curve - right out the gate. It was a slow start to the first inning made especially painful by a generous strikezone. Kelly Johnson was able to make a catch and gun down an advancing Bautista at second base, but there was damage in the first: one run scored. Hellickson got himself into trouble in the bottom of the third, fielding a 3-2 pop-up to Munenori Kawasaki that had him clipping Roberts, who was charging from third. Hellboy stepped on Roberts's back left foot and both players came away limping. Molina checked on Hellickson, and the game proceeded. No one left the dugout, and Hellboy seemed unphased. The offense had very little support for Hellickson. The Rays started scoring after some great hustle by Molina to get on base. Ryan Roberts brought him home on a slow roller to Macier Izturis that he failed to field on an attempted barehand. The ball went right under his fingers and Molina was able to "rumble" home, as Dave Willis said. Zobrist hit the next pitch into right and plated a runner for a 2-1 lead, but that was the last of the Rays offense for much of this game. Rodriguez led off the fourth with a double and then got himself picked off promptly on a throw from the catcher J.P. Arenciebia. He would be the last base runner for the Rays over the next 15 plate appearances. Jose Bautista leveled the score in the bottom of the fourth on a powerful shot to left field -- his tenth longball of the year, reading a change inside perfectly. He swung in front and muscled it sky high. To be fair, this was the last hit for the Jays until the ninth inning as well, but let's not distract from the coming frustration. The Ninth It was another weird night for the strikezone, loose but consistent for Buehrle and strangely stringent on Hellickson. For a taste of the nonsense, here's the zone from the full game: Once Buehrle was removed, the zone settled in and became far more reasonable, but that didn't detract from the missed opportunities before. Especially watching seasoned hitters like Longoria, Zobrist and Johnson who were hesitant to change their approach early in the game. Buehrle was landing calls outside the zone that were normally contested, and the Rays offense just seemed unsure. Either the strikezone back to normal or he was just ready to swing, because Longoria was comfortable reaching to pop a double off the end of the bat with one out in the ninth. The pitch was inches off the plate and Longoria pushed it up the right field line. The Rays were battling against ace reliever Casey Janssen, and James Loney put up a great performance, fouling until he found a pitch to hit and smacking a hopper up the middle to score the runner. Luke Scott got in on the action, taking a 3-2 pitch to the wall in centerfield, but it was caught by Rasmus. The Jays let Janssen pitch through the drama and Kelly Johnson eventually took strike three looking. Fernando Rodney, less than 22 hrs removed from a 5-out save yesterday, got the call to face the heart of Tornot'a order: Bautista, Encarnacion, and Lind. Bautista worked a full count, in spite of Fernando throwing easy, 99 MPH heat. Forced to come back inside to get the out, Bautista hit a moon shot into the left field bullpen. Rodney sat down E5 but walked Lind and was pulled for Peralta with the game tied , 3-3. Arencebia was lost against Peralta's fastball going down on multiple swings for the second out, and Brett Lawrie got jammed for a popup to Loney in foul territory to end the inning. Free Baseball Molina continued his on-base ways by hitting through the hole on the left side, but Escobar responded with a double play, and Jennings grounded out to short. Cesar Ramos took the mound and almost got Rasmus on a swinging bunt, but he made contact and the ball rolled out o
about 8 hours ago
about 8 hours ago
Joe is back with this postgame thoughts… What is it about Merlot Joe just wanting certain Rays killers to kill the Rays? Bad enough that Merlot Joe continues to pitch to Chris Davis of the Orioles. Now it’s Jose Bautista. The...
Joe is back with this postgame thoughts… What is it about Merlot Joe just wanting certain Rays killers to kill the Rays? Bad enough that Merlot Joe continues to pitch to Chris Davis of the Orioles. Now it’s Jose Bautista. The Jays right fielder has pounded the Rays over the years. And sure enough, he hammered the Rays again today, driving in all four Jays runs in a 4-2 win over the Rays. Just what is going through Merlot Joe’s mind (other than what wine he is going to guzzle) with a one-run lead in the ninth inning and Bautista steps to the plate? “You know, this guy hits us like Ted Williams and Albert Pujols combined. I think I will pitch to him, yeah!” Yup, you guessed it. Homer! Maybe Merlot Joe hasn’t noticed, but his bullpen is struggling. Help the guys out, don’t set them up for a fail! Man!!! Poor Hellboy who pitched (aside from facing Bautista) really strong today. And props to Dirtbag who did a fine job of taking a pitch the other way for a double down the line to set up what should have been the winning run. Joe will leave his readers with this: Merlot Joe pulls Fernando Rodney (after Merlot Joe set him up to fail). This could get very interesting. © Joe Rays Fan for Rays Index, 2013. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us Post tags:
about 8 hours ago
Blue Jays starter Mark Buehrle kept Toronto in the game all afternoon at home Wednesday against Jeremy Hellickson and the Tampa Bay Rays. Buehrle and Hellickson were deadlocked at two runs apiece after the Toronto starter left the game ...
Blue Jays starter Mark Buehrle kept Toronto in the game all afternoon at home Wednesday against Jeremy Hellickson and the Tampa Bay Rays. Buehrle and Hellickson were deadlocked at two runs apiece after the Toronto starter left the game after 109 pitches and seven innings [...] Read more Mark Buehrle news
about 9 hours ago
Playing A Little Pepper… Sean Rodriguez is starting today. It will be the first game he has appeared in since May 16th…Evan Longoria is DHing. With tomorrow’s off-day, this will give Longo’s legs two straight days...
Playing A Little Pepper… Sean Rodriguez is starting today. It will be the first game he has appeared in since May 16th…Evan Longoria is DHing. With tomorrow’s off-day, this will give Longo’s legs two straight days off…Even with the 3 errors in this series, the Rays have committed just 21 on the season. That is 20 fewer errors than at the same point last season…In his last 162 games, Evan Longoria is hitting .298 with 39 home runs, 118 RBI, a .387 OBP and .944 OPS. Game Graph… [Will be up at game time] Source: FanGraphs Lineup… Flash Jennings, CF Ryan Roberts, 3B Ben Zobrist, 2B Evan Longoria, DH James Loney, 1B Sean Rodriguez, RF Kelly Johnson, LF Jose Molina, C Yunel Escobar, SS Jeremy Hellickson, SP © The Professor for Rays Index, 2013. | Permalink | No comment | Add to del.icio.us Post tags:
about 12 hours ago
ROGER MOONEY TORONTO Matt Joyce said he doesn’t believe his right hamstring is “too serious” and he hopes to be able to pinch-hit later today against the Blue Jays if needed. Joyce left Tuesday’s win in the sevent...
ROGER MOONEY TORONTO Matt Joyce said he doesn’t believe his right hamstring is “too serious” and he hopes to be able to pinch-hit later today against the Blue Jays if needed. Joyce left Tuesday’s win in the seventh inning because of tightness in the hamstring. He thinks that might…
about 14 hours ago
Tom Szczerbowski-USA TODAY Sports 200-plus innings. 190 strikeouts. A win-loss record of 18-7 with a 2.73/1.13 ERA/WHIP. By the end of the season (at the current pace), the Tampa Bay Rays may very well have a pitcher with numbers that ar...
Tom Szczerbowski-USA TODAY Sports 200-plus innings. 190 strikeouts. A win-loss record of 18-7 with a 2.73/1.13 ERA/WHIP. By the end of the season (at the current pace), the Tampa Bay Rays may very well have a pitcher with numbers that are good enough not just to lead the team as its ace, but to contend for the AL Cy Young award altogether — and he was passed for Jeff Niemann in the starting rotation as recently as last year. Yes, the hurler that I’m speaking of is neither David Price nor Matt Moore. Instead, it’s the relatively little-known Alex Cobb, who was finally given a job in the rotation to start the season and is running away with the opportunity. His latest gem came on Tuesday against the divisional rival Toronto Blue Jays, where the righty was simply in control for the majority of his 6.1 innings, allowing just a run on three hits and two walks. The lone damage came off a rather loud home run to Colby Rasmus, but Cobb did manage to retire 11 of his first 12 batters, and otherwise only allowed one man on scoring position through his entire start after being given an early 4-0 lead to work with. With a stellar 14-2 GO-AO ratio on the day, the 25-year old didn’t even have to put his strikeout ability in play as he simply let his defense do the work. That’s not to say Cobb can’t get the whiff when he wants to, though. He actually boasts a 8.19 K/9 through his 59.1 innings in 2013 right now, a career-best mark despite just striking out two on Tuesday. Combined with an also career-best 2.12 BB/9, and you get the picture why seven of his nine starts have been of the quality variety. Still, there’s work to be done before Cobb truly takes the next level in the bigs. The biggest knock against him, inefficiency, is still something of an issue, as he’s thrown at least seven complete innings just three times this season, and needed 107 pitches to get through 6.1 against Toronto before showing signs of an empty gas tank. On top of that, Cobb has allowed long balls at a 1.21 HR/9 rate, something that’ll have to come down to keep his 2.73 ERA from trending closer to his 3.78 FIP. Sure, that’s helped by a 19.5 percent HR/FB rate that’s not likely to be sustainable, but neither is a 86.5 percent strand rate, so a little luck goes both ways, I suppose. What is certain, however, is that he is showing the skills that would make him a very solid mid-rotation starter even with a slight regression. But if he can keep improving? The top of the Rays’ starting five might get pretty crowded soon.
about 16 hours ago